US9119443B2 - Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods - Google Patents
Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods Download PDFInfo
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- US9119443B2 US9119443B2 US13/525,521 US201213525521A US9119443B2 US 9119443 B2 US9119443 B2 US 9119443B2 US 201213525521 A US201213525521 A US 201213525521A US 9119443 B2 US9119443 B2 US 9119443B2
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- fibers
- loops
- substrate
- loop
- needles
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A44—HABERDASHERY; JEWELLERY
- A44B—BUTTONS, PINS, BUCKLES, SLIDE FASTENERS, OR THE LIKE
- A44B18/00—Fasteners of the touch-and-close type; Making such fasteners
- A44B18/0003—Fastener constructions
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A44—HABERDASHERY; JEWELLERY
- A44B—BUTTONS, PINS, BUCKLES, SLIDE FASTENERS, OR THE LIKE
- A44B18/00—Fasteners of the touch-and-close type; Making such fasteners
- A44B18/0003—Fastener constructions
- A44B18/0011—Female or loop elements
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A44—HABERDASHERY; JEWELLERY
- A44B—BUTTONS, PINS, BUCKLES, SLIDE FASTENERS, OR THE LIKE
- A44B18/00—Fasteners of the touch-and-close type; Making such fasteners
- A44B18/0023—Woven or knitted fasteners
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A44—HABERDASHERY; JEWELLERY
- A44B—BUTTONS, PINS, BUCKLES, SLIDE FASTENERS, OR THE LIKE
- A44B18/00—Fasteners of the touch-and-close type; Making such fasteners
- A44B18/0023—Woven or knitted fasteners
- A44B18/0026—Devices for cutting loops into hooks
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10T—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
- Y10T428/00—Stock material or miscellaneous articles
- Y10T428/24—Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
- Y10T428/24008—Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including fastener for attaching to external surface
Definitions
- Embodiments can include one or more of the following features.
- the method further includes anchoring fibers forming the loops by fusing the fibers to each other on the first side of the substrate, while substantially preventing fusion of the fibers on the second side of the substrate.
- the needles are sized so that no more than one fiber is needled through the substrate per needle.
- the recess of each needle has a width of 80-100 microns to capture a single fiber having a titer of 60-110 dtex.
- the needles are 38 gauge fork needles and the fibers have a titer of 70 dtex.
- the fibers are drawn fibers.
- the nonwoven web includes a spunbond web.
- forming loop-engageable heads at the ends of at least some of the stems includes melting the ends of the at least some of the stems.
- removing end regions and forming loop-engageable heads are performed substantially simultaneously using a single device.
- the formed loops extend 2-8 mm from the substrate.
- the loop-engageable heads have an average height that is at least 50% larger than a diameter of a circle that circumscribes the fibers.
- needling fibers to form taller loops and needling fibers to form shorter loops having a second height includes using different sized needles disposed along a common needle board.
- needling fibers to form taller loops and needling fibers to form shorter loops having a second height includes using different needle looms having the same sized needles and moving each needle board of each needle loom different distance.
- the loops and the stems with loop-engageable heads are substantially evenly distributed along the substrate.
- the ratio of loops to stems with loop-engageable heads disposed along the substrate is 1:1 to 3:1.
- the first height is 5-8 mm and the second height is 2-4 mm.
- At least some of the loop-engageable heads extend from the substrate to a distance that is within 10% of a distance that the loops extend from the substrate.
- discrete patterns of larger loops are formed during needling to form pairs of stems with loop-engageable heads along the substrate.
- needling the fibers of the layer through the substrate includes selectively needling the fibers to form discrete regions of loops.
- a sheet-form loop product in another aspect of the invention, includes a substrate and staple fibers anchored on a first side of the substrate and having exposed fiber stems with loop-engageable heads extending from a second side of the substrate, where the fibers on the first side of the substrate are fused together to a relatively greater extent than the fibers on the second side of the substrate and pairs of the fibers extend through respective openings in the substrate.
- Embodiments can include one or more of the following features.
- the needles include tines defining a recess therebetween, the recess being sized to capture no more than one of the fibers.
- the recess has a width of 100 to 200 microns.
- the processing machine further includes a laminating station to anchor fibers forming the loops by fusing the fibers to each other on the first side of the substrate.
- a processing machine includes a needling station to penetrate a substrate with needles to drag portions of staple fibers disposed along a first side of the substrate through the substrate in order to leave exposed loops of the fibers extending from a second side of the substrate, and a device configured to remove loop-ends of the loops to form the loops into stems and to melt free ends of the stems to form loop-engageable heads at the ends of at least some of the stems.
- the processing machine further includes a laminating station to anchor fibers forming the loops by fusing the fibers to each other on the first side of the substrate.
- Methods described herein can be used to form loop-engageable fastener products that are relatively inexpensive, drapeable and strong.
- the sheet-form loop-engageable fastener products formed in this manner can also have a much greater width or surface area than similar fastener products formed using conventional techniques, such as continuous molding techniques.
- the methods described herein can be particularly advantageous for applications in which large widths or surface areas are preferred (e.g., for fastening siding to a home, for fastening membrane roofing, etc.).
- Needling the fibers in a manner such that only one fiber per needle is pushed through the substrate can also increase (e.g., maximize) the number of fibers that remain on the backside of the substrate.
- Increase the number of fibers that remain on the backside of the substrate more of those fibers are available for bonding to and anchoring the fibers that are pushed through to the front side of the substrate in the form of loops.
- the fibers that are pushed through to the front side of the substrate can be more securely anchored to the substrate, which results in higher closure strength.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener elements in the manner described above, it is possible to manufacture materials having loop-engageable fastener elements disposed in various patterns and/or configurations in a more cost effective manner than many conventional techniques. For example, forming the sheet-form loop-engageable fastener product to include discrete regions of mushroom-shaped fastener elements can reduce the amount of fibers required to create the fastener product. In addition, the discrete regions can be shaped, designed and/or positioned along the fastener product to achieve various aesthetic and/or functional design goals.
- Pushing loops through substrate to different degrees allows for creating a fastener product including both loops and loop-engageable fastener elements.
- a fastener product can be used to engage a hook material, a loop material, or a similar hook/loop material. Additionally or alternatively, the fastener product can be self-engaging (e.g., foldable to engage itself).
- drawn staple fibers can result in mushroom-shaped fastener elements that are highly loop-engageable because the alignment of the polymer chains in the drawn fibers causes them to melt substantially uniformly to provide a wider engaging portion.
- FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a process for forming mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener products.
- FIGS. 2A-2C are diagrammatic, cross-sectional side views of stages of a needling step of the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 3 is an enlarged view of a needle fork capturing a fiber during the needling process illustrated in FIGS. 2A-2C .
- FIG. 4 is a schematic illustration of the front (loop) surface of a needled loop material, showing loop structures formed by needling staple fibers from the back surface of the material during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration of the back surface of the needled loop material formed during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 6 is an enlarged diagrammatic view of a lamination nip through which the loop material passes during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 7 is an enlarged schematic illustration of laminated loop material passing through a loop-end removing station to form a stem material during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 8 is an enlarged schematic illustration of the stem material passing through a melting station to form mushroom-shaped heads on the stems during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 9 is a perspective view of a front surface of mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener material exiting the melting station during the process of FIG. 1 .
- FIG. 12 is a perspective view of a front surface of a mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener material having islands of mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- FIG. 14 is a diagrammatic cross-sectional view of different shaped fibers that can be captured by a forked needle.
- FIG. 15 is a diagrammatic side view of an elliptical needling process that can be used to needle fibers through a substrate during a process of forming mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener material.
- methods of forming mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener products include placing a layer of staple fibers on a first side of a substrate, needling fibers of the layer through the substrate by penetrating the substrate with needles that drag portions of the fibers through the substrate to form loops extending from a second side of the substrate, removing end regions from at least some of the loops to form stems, and forming loop-engageable heads at free ends of at least some of the stems.
- Such methods can be used to produce relatively inexpensive, flexible, drapeable, and strong loop-engageable fastener products.
- the fastener products can be formed to have significantly larger widths and surface areas than many loop-engageable fastener products formed using continuous molding techniques that utilize mold rolls, which tend to bow above a certain length.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a machine and process for producing an inexpensive loop-engageable touch fastener product 31 .
- a carded and cross-lapped layer of staple fibers 10 is created by two carding stages with intermediate cross-lapping. Weighed portions of staple fibers are fed to a first carding station 30 by a card feeder 34 .
- the carding station 30 includes a 36-inch breast roll 50 , a 60-inch breaker main 52 , and a 50-inch breaker doffer 54 .
- the first card feedroll drive includes 3-inch feedrolls 56 and a 3-inch cleaning roll on a 13-inch lickerin roll 58 .
- An 8-inch angle stripper 60 transfers the fiber to breast roll 50 .
- the cross-lapper 72 lays carded webs of, for example, about 80 inch (2.0 meter) width and about one-half inch (1.3 centimeter) thickness on the floor apron to build up several layers of criss-crossed web, forming a layer of, for instance, about 80 inches (2.0 meters) in width and about 4 inches (10 centimeters) in thickness, that includes four double layers of carded web.
- the fibers are separated and combed into a cloth-like mat consisting primarily of parallel fibers. With nearly all of its fibers extending in the carding direction, the mat has some strength when pulled in the carding direction but almost no strength when pulled in the carding cross direction, as cross direction strength results only from a few entanglements between fibers.
- the carded fiber mat is laid in an overlapping zigzag pattern, creating a mat 10 of multiple layers of alternating diagonal fibers.
- the diagonal layers which extend in the carding cross direction, extend more across the apron than they extend along its length.
- Cross-lapping the web before the second carding process provides several tangible benefits. For example, it enhances the blending of the fiber composition during the second carding stage. It also allows for relatively easy adjustment of web width and basis weight, simply by changing cross-lapping parameters.
- the second carding station 74 takes the cross-lapped mat of fibers and cards them a second time.
- the feedroll drive consists of two 3-inch feed rolls and a 3-inch cleaning roll 56 on a 13-inch lickerin 58 , feeding a 60-inch main roll 76 through an 8-inch angle stripper 60 .
- the fibers are worked by six 8-inch worker rolls 78 , the last five of which are paired with 3-inch strippers.
- a 50-inch finisher doffer 80 transfers the carded web to a condenser 82 having two 8-inch condenser rolls 84 , from which the web is combed onto a non-woven carrier sheet 14 fed from a spool 16 .
- the condenser typically increases the basis weight of the web and reduces the orientation of the fibers to remove directionality in the strength or other properties of the finished product.
- the fibers are coarse, crimped polypropylene fibers having a titer of 60-600 dtex (e.g., 70-110 dtex) that are about a three-inch (75 millimeters) staple length.
- the use of such coarse fibers helps to ensure that the loops, stems, and mushroom-shaped fastener elements produced in subsequent processing steps stand straight up during manufacturing.
- the fibers have a round cross-sectional shape and are crimped at about 10-13 crimps per inch (4-5 crimps per centimeter).
- the fibers are in a drawn, molecular oriented state, having been drawn under cooling conditions that enable molecular orientation to occur. Fibers can be drawn to a variety of draw ratios.
- the draw ratio is 1:4.5 to 1:5.5, pre-drawn length to final length.
- the draw ratio has been found useful for altering the subsequent formation of mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- Suitable polypropylene fibers are available from Asota Ges.m.b.H. of Linz, Austria (www.Asota.com) as type G10C.
- the carrier sheet 14 is also relatively lightweight and inexpensive as compared to materials used to form many woven and knit hook products. To optimize anchoring of the hooks during subsequent lamination, it is desirable that the fibers fuse not only to themselves on the back side of the carrier sheet 14 , but also to the filaments of the carrier sheet 14 .
- Suitable carrier sheet materials include nylons, polyesters, polyamides, polypropylenes, EVA, and their copolymers.
- the carrier sheet 14 may be supplied as a single continuous length, or as multiple, parallel strips. For particularly wide webs, it may be necessary or cost effective to introduce two or more parallel sheets, either adjacent or slightly overlapping. The parallel sheets may be unconnected or joined along a mutual edge.
- the carded, uniformly blended layer of fibers from condenser 82 is carried up conveyor 86 on carrier sheet 14 and into needling station 18 in the form of a mat 10 .
- the fiber layer or mat 10 As the fiber layer or mat 10 enters the needling station, it has no stability other than what may have been imparted by carding and cross-lapping. In other words, the fibers are not pre-needled or felted prior to reaching a subsequent needling station 18 . In this state, the fiber layer or mat 10 is not suitable for spooling or accumulating.
- the carrier sheet 14 and fiber layer 10 are needle-punched from the fiber side. Forked needles are guided through a stripping plate above the fibers, and draw fibers through the carrier sheet 14 to form loops on the opposite side.
- the needling station 18 may be a “structuring loom” configured to subject the fiber layer 10 and carrier sheet 14 to a random velouring process.
- the brush apron 22 may have a bristle density of about 2000 to 3000 bristles per square inch (310 to 465 bristles per square centimeter) (e.g., about 2570 bristles per square inch (400 per square centimeter)).
- the bristles are typically each about 0.018 inch (0.46 millimeter) in diameter and about 20 millimeters long, and are preferably straight.
- the bristles may be formed of any suitable material, for example 6/12 nylon.
- Suitable brushes may be purchased from Stratosphere, Inc., a division of Howard Brush Co., and retrofitted onto DILO and other random velouring looms. Generally, the brush apron moves at the desired line speed.
- one individual fiber 12 is captured in a recess 36 formed between two tines in the forked end of the needle 34 and the captured fiber 12 is drawn with the needle 34 through a hole or opening 38 formed in the carrier sheet 14 to the other side (e.g., the front side) of the carrier sheet 14 .
- the carrier sheet 14 remains generally supported by bristles 20 of the brush apron 22 through this process, and the penetrating needle 34 enters a space between adjacent bristles 20 .
- tension is applied to the captured fiber 12 , drawing the mat 10 down against the carrier sheet 14 .
- the needles 34 are operated in a manner to achieve a total penetration depth “D P ” of 3.0 to 12.0 millimeters (e.g., 4.0 to 6.0 millimeters), as measured from the entry surface of carrier sheet 14 .
- D P a total penetration depth of 3.0 to 12.0 millimeters (e.g., 4.0 to 6.0 millimeters), as measured from the entry surface of carrier sheet 14 .
- Penetration depths in this range have been found to provide a well-formed loop structure without overly stretching fibers in the remaining mat. Excessive penetration depth can draw loop-forming fibers from earlier-formed tufts, resulting in a less robust loop field.
- the needles 34 used to push the fibers 12 through the carrier sheet 14 each have a recess 36 that is sized and configured so that only one fiber 12 is typically captured by each needle when the needles 34 penetrate through the fiber mat 10 and the carrier sheet 14 .
- FIG. 3 schematically illustrates one of the needles 34 penetrating the fiber layer 10 in a manner so that only one of the fibers 12 is received in the recess 36 formed between tines 35 and 37 of the needle 34 to ensure that only one fiber is needled through the carrier sheet 14 by that particular fork needle 34 .
- the recess 36 is sized to have a width and depth that are approximately 75%-125% of the average diameter of the fibers.
- By capturing only one fiber 12 when the forked needle fully penetrates the fiber mat 10 and the carrier sheet 14 typically only one loop is formed on the front side of the carrier sheet 14 . Forming only one loop at a time typically allows the loops to stand proud or upright for subsequent processing. This technique also helps to ensure that a sufficient number of fibers are retained on the back side of the substrate 14 to allow for the needled loops to be adequately anchored in a manner described in greater detail below.
- the needled web 88 leaves the needling station 18 and brush apron 22 in an unbonded state, and proceeds to a lamination station 92 .
- the needled web 88 Prior to reaching the lamination station 92 , the needled web 88 passes over a gamma gage that provides a rough measure of the mass per unit area of the web. This measurement can be used as feedback to control the upstream carding and cross-lapping operations to provide more or fewer fibers based on the mass per unit area.
- the needled web 88 is in an unbonded state, it is stable enough to be accumulated in an accumulator 90 between the needling station 18 and the lamination station 92 .
- FIG. 4 shows the needled web 88 that leaves the needling station 18 having multiple loops 40 extending through the carrier sheet 14 , as formed by the above-described needling.
- the loops 40 stand proud of the underlying carrier sheet 14 and are fairly evenly distributed, due at least in part to the coarseness of the fibers 12 and the needling process during which only one fiber 12 is pushed through the carrier sheet 14 per needle.
- the coarseness of the fibers 12 can also increase stiffness of the loops, which is beneficial for subsequent processing steps.
- the back surface of the needled web 88 is relatively flat, void of extending loop structures. Forming loop material in this manner reduces the amount of fiber and overall material required. Reducing the amount of material required further reduces the overall cost and increases the drapeability of the resulting loop-engageable material.
- the needled web 88 passes through a spreading roll that spreads and centers the needled web 88 prior to entering the lamination station 92 .
- the needled web 88 passes by one or more infrared heaters 94 that preheat the fibers 12 and/or the carrier sheet 14 from the side opposite the loops.
- the heater length and line speed are such that the needled web 88 spends about four seconds in front of the infrared heaters 94 .
- Two scroll rolls 93 are positioned just prior to the infrared heaters 94 .
- the scroll rolls 93 each have a herringbone helical pattern on their surfaces and rotate in a direction opposite to the direction of travel of the needled web 88 , and are typically driven with a surface speed that is four to five times that of the surface speed of the needled web 88 .
- the scroll rolls 93 put a small amount of drag on the material, and help to dewrinkle the needled web 88 .
- a web temperature sensor that provides feedback to the heater control to maintain a desired web exit temperature.
- the rubber roll 100 is cooled, as discussed below, to prevent overheating and crushing or fusing of the loop fibers on the front surface of the needled web 88 , thereby allowing the loop fibers to remain exposed and standing upright so that the loop-ends can be removed to form stems and then the stems melted, as described below, to form mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the bonding pressure between the rubber roll 100 and the hot can 96 is quite low, in the range of about 1-50 pounds per square inch (psi) (70-3500 gsm) or less, typically about 15 to 40 psi (1050 to 2800 gsm) (e.g., about 25 psi (1750 gsm)).
- the surface of the hot can 96 is typically maintained at a temperature of about 306 degrees Fahrenheit (150 degrees Celsius).
- the needled web 88 is trained about an angle of around 300 degrees around the hot can 96 , resulting in a dwell time against the hot can of about four seconds to avoid overly melting the needled web.
- the hot can 96 can have a compliant outer surface, or be in the form of a belt.
- the rubber roll 100 includes a rubber surface layer 103 that is positioned about and supported by a cooled steel core.
- the rubber surface layer 103 has a radial thickness T R of about 22 millimeters, and has a surface hardness of about 65 Shore A.
- Nip pressure is typically maintained between the rolls such that the nip kiss length L k about the circumference of hot can 96 is about 25 millimeters, with a nip dwell time of about 75 milliseconds. Leaving the nip, a laminated web 89 travels on the surface of the cooled roll 100 .
- liquid coolant is circulated through cooling channels 105 in the steel core to maintain a core temperature of about 55 degrees F. (12.7 degrees C.) while an air plenum 99 discharges multiple jets of air against the rubber roll surface to maintain a rubber surface temperature of about 140 degrees F. (60 degrees C.) entering nip 107 .
- the laminated web 89 moves through another accumulator 90 and on to a loop-end removing station 102 , where the loop-ends of the formed loops on the front surface are removed to form stems.
- the laminated web 89 is passed by a blade device (e.g., a carpet shear) 150 that trims the outward most portions of the loops to form stems.
- a blade device 150 e.g., a carpet shear
- the blade device 150 includes one or more articulating blade members that move relative to the loops to cut the ends of the loops.
- the blade device 150 can, for example, include a spiral cutter head and nose bar that cooperate to effect shearing of the loop ends in much the same way as carpet shears and manual push lawn mowers.
- the blade device 150 is positioned close enough to the needled web so that it properly removes the loop-ends, but not so close that it removes a substantial portion of the loops.
- the blade device 150 is positioned to remove about the top third of each exposed loop.
- the blade device 150 can be configured to remove any desired portion of the exposed loops, depending on the desired height of the loop-engageable fastener elements to be formed.
- the stem web 91 moves through another accumulator 90 and on to a melting station 103 .
- the free ends of the stems protruding from the carrier sheet 14 on the front side of the stem web 91 are melted to form mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the heated blade is positioned at a distance away from the stem web 91 so that the ends of the stems barely contact the heated blade in order to prevent the entire stem from being crushed and pressed against the front side of the carrier sheet 14 or from fully melting and collapsing onto the carrier sheet 14 .
- the heated blade 152 can melt the stems without actually contacting the ends of the stems, by applying radiant heat.
- the fibers 12 are drawn polypropylene fibers, the fibers tend to have increased strength and stiffness, and the polymer chains of the fibers are typically aligned in the longitudinal direction. Therefore, as shown in FIG. 8 , instead of forming a non-uniform, globule-like end when melted, the fibers 12 form somewhat uniform mushroom-shaped ends due to the aligned polymer chains.
- Using a loop-engageable fastener material having uniform mushroom-shaped fastener elements can result in better engagement and higher closure strength between the loop-engageable fastener material and a loop material.
- the shape of the mushroom-shaped fastener element heads depends on the cross-sectional profile of the fibers used in the fiber mat 10 .
- the final shape of the mushroom-shaped fastener element heads is similar to the shape of the fiber, but larger. Therefore, as shown in FIG. 9 , when cylindrical fibers (i.e., fibers having a substantially circular cross-section) are used, the resulting mushroom-shaped fastener element heads are substantially uniform, cylinder-like elements. Since the heat source is positioned at a distance away from the ends of the stems to provide controlled heating, the end of the stem is melted to form a mushroom-shaped fastener element end having an average diameter that is approximately 1.5 to 4.0 times larger than the average diameter of the stem prior to melting. Similarly, the average height of the mushroom-shaped fastener element is close to (e.g., generally within an order of magnitude) the average diameter of the mushroom.
- the shape and size of the mushroom-shaped fastener element heads can typically be adjusted by altering the heat applied to the stems, the duration of time that the stems are subjected to the heat (i.e., the speed at which the web is passed through the melting station 103 ), and/or an external cooling process that can be applied. Subjecting the stems to increased heat or reducing the speed that the stem web 91 passes through melting station 103 typically creates a larger mushroom-shaped fastener element head.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener elements can be formed using many different operating parameters, it has been found that lower temperature and prolonged exposure time typically leads to nicely formed mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 moves through another accumulator 90 and on to an embossing station 104 where, between two counter-rotating embossing rolls, a desired pattern of locally raised regions is embossed into the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 to form an embossed web 97 .
- the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 may move directly from the melting station 103 to the embossing station 104 , without accumulation, so as to take advantage of any latent temperature increase caused by forming the mushroom-shaped fastener element ends. As shown in FIG.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 is passed through a nip between a driven embossing roll 54 and a backup roll 56 .
- the embossing roll 54 has a pattern of raised areas that permanently crush the mushroom-shaped fastener elements against the carrier sheet, and may even melt a portion of the fibers in those areas. Embossing may be employed simply to enhance the texture or aesthetic appeal of the final product.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 has sufficient strength and structural integrity so that embossing is not needed to (and typically does not) enhance the physical properties of a resulting embossed web (e.g., the loop-engageable fastener product 31 ).
- the backup roll 56 has a pattern of raised areas that mesh with dimples in the embossing roll 54 , such that embossing results in a pattern of raised hills or convex regions on the front side, with corresponding concave regions on the non-working side of the mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 , such that the embossed web 97 has a greater effective thickness than the pre-embossed mushroom-shaped fastener web 95 .
- each cell of the embossing pattern in the embossed web 97 is a closed hexagon and contains multiple discrete mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the width ‘W’ between opposite sides of the open area of the cell is about 6.5 millimeters, while the thickness T of the wall of the cell is about 0.8 millimeter.
- Various other embossing patterns can be created, for example, a grid of intersecting lines forming squares or diamonds, or a pattern that crushes the mushroom-shaped fastener elements other than in discrete regions of a desired shape, such as round pads of mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the embossing pattern may also crush the mushroom-shaped fastener elements to form a desired image, or text, on the hook material.
- the loop-engageable fastener product 31 moves through a final accumulator 90 and past a metal detector 106 that checks for any broken needles or other metal debris that could become lodged in the fastener product during manufacturing. After passing by the metal detector 106 , the loop-engageable fastener product 31 is slit to desired final widths and spooled for storage or shipment. During slitting, edges may be trimmed and removed, as can any undesired carrier sheet overlap region necessitated by using multiple parallel strips of carrier sheet.
- the needling station can include needle boards populated with discrete lanes of needles separated by wide, needle-free lanes.
- needle looms are available from Oerlikon Neumag Austria GmbH of Linz, Austria, for example.
- “on the fly” variable penetration needling looms, in conjunction with needle boards populated discontinuously, can be used to either form loops in only discrete areas along the carrier sheet or to alternatively to form loops of different heights.
- Variable penetration can be accomplished by altering the penetration depth of the needles during needling, including needling to depths at which the needles do not penetrate the carrier sheet.
- Such variable penetration needle looms are commercially available from Oerlikon (e.g., model no. NL11/SE) and Dilo, for example.
- FIG. 11 shows a loop-engageable material 200 having discrete lanes 202 , 204 , 206 of mushroom-shaped fastener elements that can be formed using needle looms fitted with needleboards of the types discussed above.
- the mushroom-shaped fastener elements can be formed using a method similar to those described above.
- the needle loom can be a computer-operated device that is programmed to cause the needles to move in a desired manner.
- the needle loom By selectively penetrating the fibers and the carrier sheet, “islands” of needled areas are produced, leaving areas of un-needled fibers. Similar to forming discrete strips of loops, the un-needled fibers can be vacuumed away and used in subsequent processing.
- the web with needled islands continues on to the subsequent stations (e.g., the lamination station, the loop-end removing station, and the melting station) and become islands of mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the shapes, designs, and patterns of islands can vary based on the needs of the end user. For example, islands can be in the form of chevrons, checkerboards, assembly instructions, or logos.
- the needled web moves on to the loop-end removing station.
- the loop-end removing station due to the positioning of the blade device, only removes the loop-ends of the taller of the two different height loops (e.g., the 8 mm loop).
- the web contains both loops and stems.
- the loop and stem web can then move on to the melting station.
- the melting station instead of processing both sets of loops, in the melting station only some of the stems (e.g., the stems formed of the 8 mm loops and not the smaller 4 mm loops) are melted at the ends to form mushroom heads.
- the resulting self-engaging touch faster material has loops that are about the same height or only slightly shorter than mushroom-shaped fastener elements.
- the loops can be approximately 4 mm tall and the mushroom-shaped loop-engageable fastener elements can be approximately 5 mm tall.
- the distribution of loops and stems with mushroom-shaped fastener elements is controlled and can be adjusted by needling more or fewer of the taller loops.
- the ratio of loops to stems with mushroom-shaped fastener elements is typically about 1:1, but can be adjusted to include more or fewer loops.
- the ratio of loops to stems can be from 1:3 to 3:1.
- the melting station uses laser cutters to melt the ends of the stems in order to reduce the amount of residual heat which could possibly melt or deform the smaller 4 mm loops.
- the needling station has been described as including a bed of bristles extending from a driven support belt of brush apron that moves with the carrier sheet, other types of supports can be used.
- the carrier sheet is supported by a screen or stitching plate that defines holes aligned with the needles, or alternatively, by a lamella plate.
- the needles are sized so that more than one fiber can be captured in each needle.
- the melting station has been described as a heated blade that melts the ends of the stems by contact or by radiant heating, other heating devices or methods can alternatively or additionally be used.
- suitable heating devices include hot rolls, hot wire knives, laser cutting devices, flame generating devices, plasma devices, and other radiant heating devices.
- the fibers have been described as being polypropylene, other fiber materials can alternatively or additionally be used.
- other fiber materials that can be used include polyolefins, polyesters, polyamides, and acrylics or mixtures, alloys, copolymers and/or co-extrusions of polyolefins, polyesters, polyamides, and acrylics.
- the fibers are bicomponent fibers that are formed of high-density polyethylene and polypropylene. It has been found that such bicomponent fibers produce particularly high quality mushroom heads. It will be understood that the laminating station and the melting station will be operated at a temperature that exceeds the melting temperature of the selected fiber material to ensure that the fibers are properly anchored and the mushroom-shaped fastener element heads are properly formed.
- the cross-sectional profile of the fibers can influence the final shape of mushroom-shaped fastener elements (i.e., the cross sectional profile of the mushroom-shaped fastener elements is typically the same as that of the fiber, but larger).
- Non-cylindrical fibers can be used to form non-cylindrical mushroom-shaped fastener elements having particular advantages. For example, in some embodiments, quadrilobe-shaped fibers are used so that the resulting fastener elements after melting form grapple hook-like fastener elements.
- the recess of the forked needle is sized to match the diameter of the smallest imaginary circle that could circumscribe the cross-sectional profile of the fibers.
- a width w of the recess of the forked needle 34 can be selected based on the diameter d of the fiber or fibers to be used.
- the width w can, for example, be about 75% to about 125% of the diameter d to ensure that any one fiber is needled through the substrate to form a single loop.
- a pre-printed carrier sheet may be employed to provide graphic images visible from the front side of the finished product. This can be advantageous, for example, for loop-engageable materials to be used on children's products, such as disposable diapers. In such cases, child-friendly graphic images can be provided on the loop-engageable material that is permanently bonded across the front of the diaper chassis to form an engagement zone for the diaper tabs.
- the image can be pre-printed on either surface of the carrier sheet, but is generally printed on the front side.
- An added film may alternatively be pre-printed to add graphics, particularly if acceptable graphic clarity cannot be obtained on a lightweight carrier sheet such as a spunbond web.
- the process above has been described as including embossing the loop-engageable fastener material to provide a textured pattern on the fastener material, in some embodiments, the resulting loop-engageable material is not embossed.
- the fastener material is undivided and remains as large rolls.
- Undivided, larger rolls can be used for applications requiring a fastener material having a large surface area (e.g., for fastening home siding or roofing material). In some cases, large rolls can be up to 2-3 meters wide.
- a binder can be used to anchor the fibers.
- the binder may be applied in liquid or powder form, and may even be pre-coated on the fiber side of the carrier web before the fibers are applied.
- a backing sheet can be introduced between the hot can and the needled web, such that the backing sheet is laminated over the back surface of the needled web while the fibers are bonded under pressure in the nip.
- Polymer backing layers or binders may be selected from among suitable polyethylenes, polyesters, EVA, polypropylenes, and their co-polymers.
- advance per stroke is limited due to a number of constraints, including needle deflection and potential needle breakage.
- the holes pierced by the needles may become elongated, due to the travel of the carrier sheet while the needle is interacting with the carrier sheet (the “dwell time”).
- This elongation is generally undesirable, as it reduces the amount of support provided to the base of each of the loop structures by the surrounding substrate, and may adversely affect resistance to loop pull-out.
- this elongation will tend to reduce the mechanical integrity of the carrier sheet due to excessive drafting (i.e., stretching of the carrier sheet in the machine direction and corresponding shrinkage in the cross-machine direction).
- Elongation of the holes may be reduced or eliminated by moving the needles in a generally elliptical path (e.g., when viewed from the side).
- This elliptical path is shown schematically in FIG. 15 .
- each needle begins at a top “dead center” position A, travels downward to pierce the carrier sheet (position B) and, while it remains in the carrier sheet (from position B through bottom “dead center” position C to position D), moves forward in the machine direction.
- the horizontal travel of the needle board is generally a function of needle penetration depth, vertical stroke length, carrier sheet thickness, and advance per stroke, and is typically roughly equivalent to the distance that the carrier sheet advances during the dwell time.
- horizontal stroke increases with increasing advance per stroke.
- advance per stroke the horizontal stroke generally increases as depth of penetration and web thickness increases.
- first carding station a cross-lapper, and a second carding station
- other fiber preparation components and/or methods can be used.
- a fiber bale opening machine and a fiber blending machine are used to prepare fibers and provide them to a single carding station.
- the materials of the loop-engageable product are selected for other desired properties.
- the hook fibers, carrier web, and backing are all formed of polypropylene, making the finished hook product readily recyclable.
- the hook fibers, carrier web and backing are all of a biodegradable material, such that the finished hook product is more environmentally friendly.
- High tenacity fibers of biodegradable polylactic acid are available, for example, from Cargill Dow LLC under the trade name NATUREWORKS.
Landscapes
- Nonwoven Fabrics (AREA)
- Slide Fasteners, Snap Fasteners, And Hook Fasteners (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims (28)
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US13/525,521 US9119443B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2012-06-18 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
| US14/812,093 US9872542B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2015-07-29 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US201161527361P | 2011-08-25 | 2011-08-25 | |
| US13/525,521 US9119443B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2012-06-18 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
Related Child Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US14/812,093 Continuation US9872542B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2015-07-29 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20130052403A1 US20130052403A1 (en) | 2013-02-28 |
| US9119443B2 true US9119443B2 (en) | 2015-09-01 |
Family
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US13/525,521 Active 2033-10-03 US9119443B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2012-06-18 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
| US14/812,093 Active 2032-11-13 US9872542B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2015-07-29 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
Family Applications After (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US14/812,093 Active 2032-11-13 US9872542B2 (en) | 2011-08-25 | 2015-07-29 | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
Country Status (5)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (2) | US9119443B2 (en) |
| EP (1) | EP2747594B1 (en) |
| CN (1) | CN103889261B (en) |
| BR (1) | BR112014004253B1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2013028250A1 (en) |
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| US20130255325A1 (en) * | 2012-03-30 | 2013-10-03 | Deckers Outdoor Corporation | Wool pile fabric including security fibers and method of manufacturing same |
| US9872542B2 (en) * | 2011-08-25 | 2018-01-23 | Velcro BVBA | Loop-engageable fasteners and related systems and methods |
| US20180050484A1 (en) * | 2015-03-16 | 2018-02-22 | Gerald ROCHA | Touch fasteners and methods of formation |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
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| US20130052403A1 (en) | 2013-02-28 |
| EP2747594B1 (en) | 2015-08-26 |
| US20150327633A1 (en) | 2015-11-19 |
| US9872542B2 (en) | 2018-01-23 |
| CN103889261A (en) | 2014-06-25 |
| CN103889261B (en) | 2017-05-10 |
| BR112014004253B1 (en) | 2021-04-27 |
| BR112014004253A2 (en) | 2017-03-14 |
| WO2013028250A1 (en) | 2013-02-28 |
| EP2747594A1 (en) | 2014-07-02 |
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